Information About the CLI Prompt

Once you have successfully accessed the device, the CLI prompt displays in the terminal window of your console port or remote workstation as shown in the following example:

User Access Verification
login: admin
Password:<password>
Cisco Nexus Operating System (NX-OS) Software
TAC support: http://www.cisco.com/tac
Copyright (c) 2002-2009, Cisco Systems, Inc. All rights reserved.
The copyrights to certain works contained in this software are
owned by other third parties and used and distributed under
license. Certain components of this software are licensed under
the GNU General Public License (GPL) version 2.0 or the GNU
Lesser General Public License (LGPL) Version 2.1. A copy of each
such license is available at
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/gpl-2.0.php and
http://www.opensource.org/licenses/lgpl-2.1.php
switch#

You can change the default device hostname.

From the CLI prompt, you can do the following:

Use CLI commands for configuring features

Access the command history

Use command parsing functions

Note

In normal operation, usernames are case sensitive. However, when you are connected to the device through its console port, you can enter a login username in all uppercase letters regardless of how the username was defined. As long as you provide the correct password, the device logs you in.

EXEC Command Mode

When you first log in, the Cisco NX-OS software places you in EXEC mode. The commands available in EXEC mode include the show commands that display the device status and configuration information, the clear commands, and other commands that perform actions that you do not save in the device configuration.

Global Configuration Command Mode

Global configuration mode provides access to the broadest range of commands. The term indicates characteristics or features that affect the device as a whole. You can enter commands in global configuration mode to configure your device globally, or to enter more specific configuration modes to configure specific elements such as interfaces or protocols.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Example:

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)#

Enters global configuration mode.

Note

The CLI prompt changes to indicate that you are in global configuration mode.

Interface Configuration Command Mode

One example of a specific configuration mode that you enter from global configuration mode is interface configuration mode. To configure interfaces on your device, you must specify the interface and enter interface configuration mode.

You must enable many features on a per-interface basis. Interface configuration commands modify the operation of the interfaces on the device, such as Ethernet interfaces or management interfaces (mgmt 0).

For more information about configuring interfaces, see the Cisco Nexus Interfaces guide for your device.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Example:

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)#

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 2

interfacetypenumber

Example: switch(config)# interface ethernet 2/2 switch(config-if)#

Specifies the interface that you want to configure.

The CLI places you into interface configuration mode for the specified interface.

Note

The CLI prompt changes to indicate that you are in interface configuration mode.

Subinterface Configuration Command Mode

From global configuration mode, you can access a configuration submode for configuring VLAN interfaces called subinterfaces. In subinterface configuration mode, you can configure multiple virtual interfaces on a single physical interface. Subinterfaces appear to a protocol as distinct physical interfaces.

Subinterfaces also allow multiple encapsulations for a protocol on a single interface. For example, you can configure IEEE 802.1Q encapsulation to associate a subinterface with a VLAN.

For more information about configuring subinterfaces, see the Cisco Nexus Interfaces guide for your device.. For details about the subinterface commands, see the command reference guide for your device.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Example:

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)#

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 2

interfacetypenumber.subint

Example:

switch(config)# interface ethernet 2/2.1
switch(config-subif)#

Specifies the VLAN interface to be configured.

The CLI places you into a subinterface configuration mode for the specified VLAN interface.

Note

The CLI prompt changes to indicate that you are in global configuration mode.

Saving and Restoring a Command Mode

The Cisco NX-OS software allows you to save current command mode, configure a feature, and then restore the previous command mode. The push command saves the command mode and the pop command restores the command mode.

Exiting a Configuration Command Mode

To exit from any configuration command mode, perform one of the following tasks:

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

exit

Example:

switch(config-if)# exit
switch(config)#

Exits from the current configuration command mode and returns to the previous configuration command mode.

Step 2

end

Example:

switch(config-if)# end
switch#

Exits from the current configuration command mode and returns to EXEC mode.

Step 3

Ctrl-Z

Example:

switch(config-if)# ^Z
switch#

(Optional)

Exits the current configuration command mode and returns to EXEC mode.

Caution

If you use Ctrl-Z at the end of a command line in which a valid command has been typed, the CLI adds the command to the running configuration file. In most cases, you should exit a configuration mode using the exit or end command.

Command Mode Summary

This table summarizes information about the main command modes.

Table 1 Command Mode Summary

Mode

Access Method

Prompt

Exit Method

EXEC

From the login prompt, enter your username and password.

switch#

To exit to the login prompt, use the exit command.

Global configuration

From EXEC mode, use the configure terminal command.

switch(config)#

To exit to EXEC mode, use the end or exit command or press Ctrl-Z.

Interface configuration

From global configuration mode, use an interface command and specify an interface with an interface command.

switch(config-if)#

To exit to global configuration mode, use the exit command.

To exit to EXEC mode, use the exit command or press Ctrl-Z.

Subinterface configuration

From global configuration mode, specify a subinterface with an interface command.

switch(config-subif)#

To exit to global configuration mode, use the exit command.

To exit to EXEC mode, use the end command or press Ctrl-Z.

VDC configuration

From global configuration mode, use the vdc command and specify a VDC name.

switch(config-vdc)#

To exit to global configuration mode, use the exit command.

To exit to EXEC mode, use the end command or press Ctrl-Z.

VRF configuration

From global configuration mode, use the vrf command and specify a routing protocol.

switch(config-vrf)#

To exit to global configuration mode, use the exit command.

To exit to EXEC mode, use the end command or press Ctrl-Z.

EXEC for a nondefault VDC

From EXEC mode, use the switchto vdc command and specify a VDC.

switch-vdc2#

To exit to the default VDC, use the exit command or the switchback command.

EXEC for a nondefault VRF

From EXEC mode, use the routing-context vrf command and specify a VRF.

switch%red#

To exit to the default VRF, use the routing-context vrf default command.

Special Characters

This table lists the characters that have special meaning in Cisco NX-OS text strings and should be used only in regular expressions or other special contexts.

Table 2 Special Characters

Character

Description

%

Percent

#

Pound, hash, or number

...

Ellipsis

|

Vertical bar

< >

Less than or greater than

[ ]

Brackets

{ }

Braces

Keystroke Shortcuts

This table lists command key combinations that can be used in both EXEC and configuration modes.

Table 3 Keystroke Shortcuts

Keystokes

Description

Ctrl-A

Moves the cursor to the beginning of the line.

Ctrl-B

Moves the cursor one character to the left. When you enter a command that extends beyond a single line, you can press the Left Arrow or Ctrl-B keys repeatedly to scroll back toward the system prompt and verify the beginning of the command entry, or you can press the Ctrl-A key combination.

Ctrl-C

Cancels the command and returns to the command prompt.

Ctrl-D

Deletes the character at the cursor.

Ctrl-E

Moves the cursor to the end of the line.

Ctrl-F

Moves the cursor one character to the right.

Ctrl-G

Exits to the previous command mode without removing the command string.

Ctrl-K

Deletes all characters from the cursor to the end of the command line.

Ctrl-L

Redisplays the current command line.

Ctrl-N

Displays the next command in the command history.

Ctrl-O

Clears the terminal screen.

Ctrl-P

Displays the previous command in the command history.

Ctrl-R

Redisplays the current command line.

Ctrl-T

Transposes the character under the cursor with the character located to the right of the cursor. The cursor is then moved right one character.

Ctrl-U

Deletes all characters from the cursor to the beginning of the command line.

Ctrl-V

Removes any special meaning for the following keystroke. For example, press Ctrl-V before entering a question mark (?) in a regular expression.

Ctrl-W

Deletes the word to the left of the cursor.

Ctrl-X, H

Lists the history of commands you have entered.

When using this key combination, press and release the Ctrl and X keys together before pressing H.

Ctrl-Y

Recalls the most recent entry in the buffer (press keys simultaneously).

Ctrl-Z

Ends a configuration session, and returns you to EXEC mode.

When used at the end of a command line in which a valid command has been typed, the resulting configuration is first added to the running configuration file.

Up arrow key

Displays the previous command in the command history.

Down arrow key

Displays the next command in the command history.

Right arrow key

Left arrow key

Moves your cursor through the command string, either forward or backward, allowing you to edit the current command.

?

Displays a list of available commands.

Tab

Completes the word for you after entering the first characters of the word, and then pressing the Tab key. All options that match are presented.

Abbreviating Commands

You can abbreviate commands and keywords by entering the first few characters of a command. The abbreviation must include sufficient characters to make it unique from other commands or keywords. If you are having trouble entering a command, check the system prompt and enter the question mark (?) for a list of available commands. You might be in the wrong command mode or using incorrect syntax.

This table lists examples of command abbreviations.

Table 4 Examples of Command Abbreviations

Command

Abbreviation

configure terminal

conf t

copy running-config startup-config

copy run start

interface ethernet 1/2

int e 1/2

show running-config

sh run

Completing a Partial Command Name

If you cannot remember a complete command name, or if you want to reduce the amount of typing you have to perform, enter the first few letters of the command, then press the Tab key. The command line parser will complete the command if the string entered is unique to the command mode. If your keyboard does not have a Tab key, press Ctrl-I instead.

The CLI recognizes a command once you have entered enough characters to make the command unique. For example, if you enter "conf" in EXEC mode, the CLI will be able to associate your entry with the configure command, because only the configure command begins with "conf".

In the following example the CLI recognizes the unique string for conf in EXEC mode when you press the Tab key:

switch# conf<Tab>
switch# configure

When you use the command completion feature the CLI displays the full command name. The CLI does not execute the command until you press the Return or Enter key. This allows you to modify the command if the full command was not what you intended by the abbreviation. If you enter a set of characters that could indicate more than one command, a list of matching commands displays.

For example, entering co<Tab> lists all commands available in EXEC mode beginning with "co":

switch# co<Tab>
configure copy
switch# co

Note that the characters you entered appear at the prompt again to allow you to complete the command entry.

Identifying Your Location in the Command Hierarchy

Some features have a configuration submode hierarchy nested more than one level. In these cases, you can display information about your present working context (PWC).

Using the no Form of a Command

Almost every configuration command has a no form that can be used to disable a feature, revert to a default value, or remove a configuration. The Cisco NX-OS command reference publications describe the function of the no form of the command whenever a no form is available.

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)# radius-server host 10.10.2.2
switch(config)# show radius-server
retransmission count:0
timeout value:1
deadtime value:1
total number of servers:1
following RADIUS servers are configured:
10.10.1.1:
available for authentication on port:1812
available for accounting on port:1813
10.10.2.2:
available for authentication on port:1812
available for accounting on port:1813
switch(config)# no radius-server host 10.10.2.2
switch(config)# show radius-server
retransmission count:0
timeout value:1
deadtime value:1
total number of servers:1
following RADIUS servers are configured:
10.10.1.1:
available for authentication on port:1812
available for accounting on port:1813

Configuring CLI Variables

About CLI Variables

The Cisco NX-OS software supports the definition and use of variables in CLI commands.

You can refer to CLI variables in the following ways:

Entered directly on the command line.

Passed to a script initiated using the run-script command. The variables defined in the parent shell are available for use in the child run-script command process.

CLI variables have the following characteristics:

Cannot have nested references through another variable

Can persist across switch reloads or exist only for the current session

Cisco NX-OS supports one predefined variable: TIMESTAMP. This variable refers to the current time when the command executes in the format YYYY-MM-DD-HH.MM.SS.

Note

The TIMESTAMP variable name is case sensitive. All letters must be uppercase.

Configuring CLI Session-Only Variables

You can define CLI session variables to persist only for the duration of your CLI session. These variables are useful for scripts that you execute periodically. You can reference the variable by enclosing the name in parentheses and preceding it with a dollar sign ($), for example $(variable-name).

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

cli var name variable-name variable-text

Example:

switch# cli var name testinterface ethernet 2/1

Configures the CLI session variable. The variable-name argument is alphanumeric, case sensitive, and has a maximum length of 31 characters. The variable-text argument is alphanumeric, case sensitive, can contain spaces, and has a maximum length of 200 characters.

Step 2

show cli variables

Example:

switch# show cli variables

(Optional)

Displays the CLI variable configuration.

Configuring Persistent CLI Variables

You can configure CLI variables that persist across CLI sessions and device reloads.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Example:

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)#

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 2

cli var namevariable-namevariable-text

Example:

switch(config)# cli var name testinterface ethernet 2/1

Configures the CLI persistent variable. The variable name is case-sensitive alphanumeric string and must begin with an alphabetic character. The maximum length is 31 characters.

The Cisco NX-OS software provides one default alias, alias, which is the equivalent to the show cli alias command that displays all user-defined aliases.

You cannot delete or change the default command alias alias.

You can nest aliases to a maximum depth of 1. One command alias can refer to another command alias that must refer to a valid command, not to another command alias.

A command alias always replaces the first command keyword on the command line.

You can define command aliases for commands in any command mode.

If you reference a CLI variable in a command alias, the current value of the variable appears in the alias, not the variable reference.

You can use command aliases for show command searching and filtering.

Defining Command Aliases

You can define command aliases for commonly used commands.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

configure terminal

Example:

switch# configure terminal
switch(config)#

Enters global configuration mode.

Step 2

cli alias namealias-name alias-text

Example:

switch(config)# cli alias name ethint interface ethernet

Configures the command alias. The alias name is an alphanumeric string that is not case sensitive and must begin with an alphabetic character. The maximum length is 30 characters.

Step 3

exit

Example:

switch(config)# exit
switch#

Exits global configuration mode.

Step 4

alias

Example:

switch# alias

(Optional)

Displays the command alias configuration.

Step 5

copy running-config startup-config

Example:

switch# copy running-config startup-config

(Optional)

Copies the running configuration to the startup configuration.

Configuring Command Aliases for a User Session

You can create a command alias for the current user session which is not available to any other user on the Cisco NX-OS device. You can also save the command alias for future use by the current user account.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

terminal alias [persist] alias-namecommand -string

Example:

switch# terminal alias shintbr show interface brief

Configures a command alias for the current user session. Use the persist keyword to save the alias for future use by the user account.

Note

Do not abbreviate the persist keyword.

Command Scripts

This section describes how you can create scripts of commands to perform multiple tasks.

Running a Command Script

You can create a list of commands in a file and execute them from the CLI. You can use CLI variables in the command script.

Note

You cannot create the script files at the CLI prompt. You can create the script file on a remote device and copy it to the bootflash:, slot0:, or volatile: directory on the Cisco NX-OS device.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

run-script [bootflash: | slot0: | volatile:]filename

Example:

switch# run-script testfile

Executes the commands in the file on the default directory.

Echoing Information to the Terminal

You can echo information to the terminal, which is particularly useful from a command script. You can reference CLI variables and use formatting options in the echoed text.

This table lists the formatting options that you can insert in the text.

Table 5 Formatting Options for the echo Command

Formatting Option

Description

\b

Inserts back spaces.

\c

Removes the new line character at the end of the text string.

\f

Inserts a form feed character.

\n

Inserts a new line character.

\r

Returns to the beginning of the text line.

\t

Inserts a horizontal tab character.

\v

Inserts a vertical tab character.

\\

Displays a backslash character.

\nnn

Displays the corresponding ASCII octal character.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

echo [backslash-interpret] [text]

Example:

switch# echo This is a test.
This is a test.

The backslash-interpret keyword indicates that the text string contains formatting options. The text argument is alphanumeric, case sensitive, and can contain blanks. The maximum length is 200 characters. The default is a blank line.

Delaying Command Action

You can delay a command action for a period of time, which is particularly useful within a command script.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

sleepseconds

Example:

switch# sleep 30

Causes a delay for a number of seconds. The range is from 0 to 2147483647.

Context-Sensitive Help

The Cisco NX-OS software provides context-sensitive help in the CLI. You can use a question mark (?) at any point in a command to list the valid input options.

CLI uses the caret (^) symbol to isolate input errors. The ^ symbol appears at the point in the command string where you have entered an incorrect command, keyword, or argument.

This table shows example outputs of context sensitive help.

Table 6 Context-Sensitive Help Example

Example Outputs

Description

switch# clock ?
set HH:MM:SS Current Time
switch# clock

Displays the command syntax for the clock command in EXEC mode.

The switch output shows that the set keyword is required for using the clock command.

switch# clock set ?
WORD HH:MM:SS Current Time
switch# clock set

Displays the command syntax for setting the time.

The help output shows that the current time is required for setting the clock and how to format the time.

switch# clock set 13:32:00<CR>
% Incomplete command
switch#

Adds the current time.

The CLI indicates the command is incomplete.

switch# <Ctrl-P>
switch# clock set 13:32:00

Displays the previous command that you entered.

switch# clock set 13:32:00 ?
<1-31> Day of the month
switch# clock set 13:32:00

Displays the additional arguments for the clock set command.

switch# clock set 13:32:00 18 ?
April Month of the year
August Month of the year
December Month of the year
February Month of the year
January Month of the year
July Month of the year
June Month of the year
March Month of the year
May Month of the year
November Month of the year
October Month of the year
September Month of the year
switch# clock set 13:32:00 18

switch# clock set 13:32:00 18 April ?
<2000-2030> Enter the year (no abbreviation)
switch# clock set 13:32:00 18 April

Displays the correct arguments for the year.

switch# clock set 13:32:00 18 April 2008<CR>
switch#

Enters the correct syntax for the clock set command.

Understanding Regular Expressions

The Cisco NX-OS software supports regular expressions for searching and filtering in CLI output, such as the show commands. Regular expressions are case sensitive and allow for complex matching requirements.

Special Characters

You can also use other keyboard characters (such as ! or ~) as single-character patterns, but certain keyboard characters have special meanings when used in regular expressions.

This table lists the keyboard characters that have special meanings.

Table 7 Special Characters with Special Meaning

Character

Special Meaning

.

Matches any single character, including white space.

*

Matches 0 or more sequences of the pattern.

+

Matches 1 or more sequences of the pattern.

?

Matches 0 or 1 occurrences of the pattern.

^

Matches the beginning of the string.

$

Matches the end of the string.

_ (underscore)

Matches a comma (,), left brace ({), right brace (}), left parenthesis ( ( ), right parenthesis ( ) ), the beginning of the string, the end of the string, or a space.

Note

The underscore is only treated as a regular expression for BPG related commands

To use these special characters as single-character patterns, remove the special meaning by preceding each character with a backslash (\). This example contains single-character patterns that match a dollar sign ($), an underscore (_), and a plus sign (+), respectively:

\$ \_ \+

Multiple-Character Patterns

You can also specify a pattern that contains multiple characters by joining letters, digits, or keyboard characters that do not have special meanings. For example, a4% is a multiple-character regular expression.

With multiple-character patterns, the order is important. The regular expression a4% matches the character a followed by a 4 followed by a percent sign (%). If the string does not have a4%, in that order, pattern matching fails. The multiple-character regular expression a. (the character a followed by a period) uses the special meaning of the period character to match the letter a followed by any single character. With this example, the strings ab, a!, or a2 are all valid matches for the regular expression.

You can remove the special meaning of a special character by inserting a backslash before it. For example, when the expression a\. is used in the command syntax, only the string a. will be matched.

Anchoring

You can match a regular expression pattern against the beginning or the end of the string by anchoring these regular expressions to a portion of the string using the special characters.

This table lists the special characters that you can use for anchoring.

Table 8 Special Characters Used for Anchoring

Character

Description

^

Matches the beginning of the string.

$

Matches the end of the string.

For example, the regular expression ^con matches any string that starts with "con", and sole$ matches any string that ends with "sole".

Note

The ^ symbol can also be used to indicate the logical function "not" when used in a bracketed range. For example, the expression [^abcd] indicates a range that matches any single letter, as long as it is not a, b, c, or d.

Searching and Filtering show Command Output

Often, the output from show commands can be lengthy and cumbersome. The Cisco NX-OS software provides the means to search and filter the output so that you can easily locate information. The searching and filtering options follow a pipe character (|) at the end of the show command. You can display the options using the using the CLI context-sensitive help facility:

switch# show running-config | ?
cut Print selected parts of lines.
diff Show difference between current and previous invocation (creates temp files:
remove them with 'diff-clean' command and don't use it on commands with big
outputs, like 'show tech'!)
egrep Egrep - print lines matching a pattern
grep Grep - print lines matching a pattern
head Display first lines
human Output in human format
last Display last lines
less Filter for paging
no-more Turn-off pagination for command output
perl Use perl script to filter output
section Show lines that include the pattern as well as the subsequent lines that are
more indented than matching line
sed Stream Editor
sort Stream Sorter
sscp Stream SCP (secure copy)
tr Translate, squeeze, and/or delete characters
uniq Discard all but one of successive identical lines
vsh The shell that understands cli command
wc Count words, lines, characters
xml Output in xml format (according to .xsd definitions)
begin Begin with the line that matches
count Count number of lines
end End with the line that matches
exclude Exclude lines that match
include Include lines that match

Filtering and Searching Keywords

The Cisco NX-OS CLI provides a set of keywords that you can use with the show commands to search and filter the command output.

This table lists the keywords for filtering and searching the CLI output.

Table 9 Filtering and Searching Keywords

Keyword Syntax

Description

beginstring

Example:

show version | begin Hardware

Starts displaying at the line that contains the text that matches the search string. The search string is case sensitive.

count

Example:

show running-config | count

Displays the number of lines in the command output.

cut [-dcharacter] {-b | -c | -f | -s}

Example:

show file testoutput | cut -b 1-10

Displays only the part of the output lines. You can display a number of bytes (-b), characters (-vcut [-dcharacter] {-b | -c | -f | -s}), or fields (-f). You can also use the -d keyword to define a field delimiter other than the tag character default. The -s keyword suppress the display of line not containing the delimiter.

endstring

Example:

show running-config | end interface

Displays all lines up to the last occurrence of the search string.

excludestring

Example:

show interface brief | exclude down

Displays all lines that do not include the search string. The search string is case sensitive.

head [lineslines]

Example:

show logging logfile | head lines 50

Displays the beginning of the output for the number of lines specified. The default number of lines is 10.

human

Example:

show version | human

Displays the output in normal format if you have previously set the output format to XML using the terminal output xml command.

includestring

Example:

show interface brief | include up

Displays all lines that include the search string. The search string is case sensitive.

last [lines]

Example:

show logging logfile | last 50

Displays the end of the output for the number of lines specified. The default number of lines is 10.

no-more

Example:

show interface brief | no-more

Displays all the output without stopping at the end of the screen with the ––More–– prompt.

sscpSSH-connection-namefilename

Example:

show version | sscp MyConnection show_version_output

Redirects the output using streaming secure copy (sscp) to a named SSH connection. You can create the SSH named connection using the ssh name command.

wc [bytes | lines | words]

Example:

show file testoutput | wc bytes

Displays counts of characters, lines, or words. The default is to display the number of lines, words, and characters.

xml

Example:

show version | xml

Displays the output in XML format.

diff Utility

You can compare the output from a show command with the output from the previous invocation of that command.

diff-clean [all-session] [all-users]

This table describes the keywords for the diff utility.

Keyword

Description

all-sessions

Removes diff temporary files from all sessions (past and present sessions) of the current user.

all-users

Removes diff temporary files from all sessions (past and present sessions) of all users.

The Cisco NX-OS software creates temporary files for the most current output for a show command for all current and previous users sessions. You can remove these temporary files using the diff-clean command.

diff-clean [all-sessions | all-users]

By default, the diff-clean command removes the temporary files for the current user's active session. The all-sessions keyword removes temporary files for all past and present sessions for the current user. The all-users keyword removes temporary files for all past and present sessions for the all users.

grep and egrep Utilities

You can use the Global Regular Expression Print (grep) and Extended grep (egrep) command-line utilities to filter the show command output.

Specifies the number of lines to display after a matched line. The default is 0. The range is from 1 to 999.

prevlines

Specifies the number of lines to display before a matched line. The default is 0. The range is from 1 to 999.

word-exp

Displays only lines that match a complete word.

expression

Specifies a regular expression for searching the output.

less Utility

You can use the less utility to display the contents of the show command output one screen at a time. You can enter less commands at the : prompt. To display all less commands you can use, enter h at the : prompt.

sed Utility

You can use the Stream Editor (sed) utility to filter and manipulate the show command output as follows:

Searching and Filtering from the --More-- Prompt

You can search and filter output from --More– prompts in the show command output.

This table describes the --More– prompt commands.

Table 12 --More-- Prompt Commands

Commands

Description

[lines]<space>

Displays output lines for either the specified number of lines or the current screen size.

[lines]z

Displays output lines for either the specified number of lines or the current screen size. If you use the lines argument, that value becomes the new default screen size.

[lines]<return>

Displays output lines for either the specified number of lines or the current default number of lines. The initial default is 1 line. If you use the optional lines argument, that value becomes the new default number of lines to display for this command.

[lines]d or [lines]Ctrl+shift+D

Scrolls through output lines for either the specified number of lines or the current default number of lines. The initial default is 11 lines. If you use the optional lines argument, that value becomes the new default number of lines to display for this command.

q or Q or Ctrl-C

Exits the --More– prompt.

[lines]s

Skips forward in the output for either the specified number of lines or the current default number of lines and displays a screen of lines. The default is 1 line.

[lines]f

Skips forward in the output for either the specified number of screens or the current default number of screens and displays a screen of lines. The default is 1 screen.

=

Displays the current line number.

[count]/expression

Skips to the line that matches the regular expression and displays a screen of output lines. Use the optional count argument to search for lines with multiple occurrences of the expression. This command sets the current regular expression that you can use in other commands.

[count]n

Skips to the next line that matches the current regular expression and displays a screen of output lines. Use the optional count argument to skip past matches.

{! | :![shell-cmd]}

Executes the command specified in the shell-cmd argument in a subshell.

.

Repeats the previous command.

Using the Command History

The Cisco NX-OS software CLI allows you to access the command history for the current user session. You can recall and reissue commands, with or without modification. You can also clear the command history.

You can also use the Ctrl-P and Ctrl-N keystroke shortcuts to recall commands.

Controlling CLI History Recall

You can control the commands that you recall from the CLI history using the Ctrl-P and Ctrl-N keystroke shortcuts. By default, the Cisco NX-OS software recalls all commands from the current command mode and higher command modes. For example, if you are working in global configuration mode, the command recall keystroke shortcuts recall both EXEC mode and global configuration mode commands. Using the terminal history no-exec-in-config command, you can avoid recalling EXEC mode commands when you are in a configuration mode.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

[no] terminal history no-exec-in-config

Example:

switch# terminal history no-exec-in-config

Configures the CLI history to remove the EXEC commands when you use the recall keystroke shortcuts in a configuration mode. The default recalls EXEC commands. You can revert to the default using the no form of the command.

Configuring the CLI Edit Mode

You can recall commands from the CLI history using the Ctrl-P and Ctrl-N keystroke shortcuts and edit them before reissuing them. The default edit mode is emacs. You can change the edit mode to vi.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

[no] terminal edit-mode vi [persist]

Example:

switch# terminal edit-mode vi

Changes the CLI edit mode to vi for the user session. The persist keyword makes the setting persistent across sessions for the current username.

Use the no to revert to using emacs.

Displaying the Command History

You can display the command history using the show cli history command.

By default, the number of lines displayed is 12 and the output includes the command number and timestamp.

The example shows how to display default number of lines of the command history:

switch# show cli history

The example shows how to display 20 lines of the command history:

switch# show cli history 20

The example shows how to display only the configuration commands in the command history:

switch(config)# show cli history config-only

The example shows how to display only the EXEC commands in the command history:

switch(config)# show cli history exec-only

The example shows how to display only the commands in the command history for the current command mode:

switch(config-if)# show cli history this-mode-only

The example shows how to display only the commands in the command history without the command number and timestamp:

switch(config)# show cli history unformatted

Enabling or Disabling the CLI Confirmation Prompts

For many features, the Cisco NX-OS software displays prompts on the CLI that ask for confirmation before continuing. You can enable or disable these prompts. The default is enabled.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

[no] terminal dont-ask [persist]

Example:

switch# terminal dont-ask

Disables the CLI confirmation prompt. The persist keyword makes the setting persistent across sessions for the current username. The default is enabled.

Use the no form of the command to enable the CLI confirmation prompts.

Setting CLI Display Colors

You can change the CLI colors to display as follows:

The prompt displays in green if the previous command succeeded.

The prompt displays in red of the previous command failed.

The user input displays in blue.

The command output displays in the default color.

The default colors are those sent by the terminal emulator software.

Procedure

Command or Action

Purpose

Step 1

terminal color [evening] [persist]

Example:

switch# terminal color

Sets the CLI display colors for the terminal session. The evening keyword is not supported. The persist keyword makes the setting persistent across sessions for the current username. The default setting is not persistent.

Sending Commands to Modules

You can send commands directly to modules from the supervisor module session using the slot command.

The slot has the following syntax:

slotslot-number [quoted] command-string

By default, the keyword and arguments in the command-string argument are space-separated. To send more than one command to a module, separate the commands with a space character, a semicolon character (;), and a space character.

The quoted keyword indicates that the command string begins and ends with double quotation marks ("). Use this keyword when you want to redirect the module command output to a filtering utility, such as diff, that is only supported on the supervisor module session.

The following example shows how to display and filter module information:

switch# slot 2 show version | grep lc

The following example shows how to filter module information on the supervisor module session:

BIOS Loader Prompt

When the supervisor modules power up, a specialized BIOS image automatically loads and tries to locate a valid kickstart image for booting the system. If a valid kickstart image is not found, the following BIOS loader prompt displays:

loader>

For information on how to load the Cisco NX-OS software from th loader> prompt, see the Cisco Nexus Troubleshooting guide for your device.